NATIONAL GREENHOUSE

ACCOUNTS FACTORS

Australian National Greenhouse Accounts

July2017

Published by the Department of the Environment and Energy.

© Commonwealth of Australia 2017

ISSN: 2202-333X

© Commonwealth of Australia 2017

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© Commonwealth of Australia 2017

Disclaimer:

While reasonable efforts have been made to ensure that the contents ofthis publication are factually correct, the Commonwealth does not accept responsibility for the accuracy or completeness of the contents, and shall not be liable for any loss or damage that may be occasioned directly or indirectly through the use of, or reliance on, the contents of this publication.

Table of Contents

1Key definitions and terms

2Energy

3Industrial processes including use of synthetic gases

4Waste emissions

5Agriculture

6Land use, land-use change and forestry...... 55

Appendix 1 Greenhouse gas global warming potentials

Appendix 2 Units and conversions

Appendix 3 Carbon content factors for fuels

Appendix 4 Scope 3 emission factors

Appendix 5 Revisions to factors from previous issue

List of Tables

Table 1: Fuel combustion emission factors - solid fuels and certain coal based products

Table 2: Emission factors for the consumption of natural gas

Table 3: Fuel combustion emission factors - liquid fuels for stationary energy purposes

Table 4: Fuel combustion emission factors - fuels used for transport energy purposes

Table 5 : Indirect (scope 2) emission factors for consumption of electricity from the grid

Table 6 : Indirect (scope 2) emissions factors for electricity grids

Table 7: Post-mining activities—emission factors

Table 8: Emission factors for the production of coal (fugitive) - Open cut

Table 9: Oil and gas exploration-flared emission factors

Table 10: Oil production (other than venting and flaring) emission factors

Table 11: Crude oil production (flared emissions) emission factors

Table 12: Oil transport emission factors

Table 13: Oil refining and storage emission factors

Table 14: Refinery gas flaring emission factors

Table 15: Natural gas production and processing flared) emission factors

Table 16: Natural gas transmission emission factors

Table 17: Natural gas leakage factors

Table 18: Flaring emission factors

Table 19: Clinker production emission factors

Table 20: Lime production emission factors

Table 21: Calcination of carbonates emission factors

Table 22: Soda ash consumption emission factor

Table 23: Nitric acid production emission factors

Table 24: Aluminium perfluoronated carbon compound emission factors

Table 25: Leakage rates for synthetic gases

Table 26: Default industrial wastewater treatment parameters by commodity type

Table 27: Global Warming Potentials

Table 28: Metric prefixes

Table 29: Unit equivalences

Table 30: Energy conversion factors

Table 31: Municipal solid waste volume to weight conversion factors

Table 32: Carbon content factors - Solid fuels and certain coal based products

Table 33: Carbon content factors - Gaseous fuels

Table 34: Carbon content factors - Liquid fuels and certain petroleum based products

Table 35: Carbon content factors - Petroleum feedstocks and products

Table 36: Carbon content factors – carbonates

Table 37: Scope 3 emission factors –solid fuels and certain coal based products

Table 38: Scope 3 emission factors – natural gas for a product that is not ethane

Table 39: Scope 3 emission factors – ethane

Table 40: Scope 3 emission factors – liquid fuels and certain petroleum based products

Table 41: Scope 2 and 3 emissions factors - consumption of purchased electricity

Table 42: Waste mix methane conversion factors

Table 43: Waste variables and default values

Table 44: Waste emission factors for total waste disposed to landfill

Table 45: Municipal waste variables and default values

1 Department of the Environment and Energy

Introduction

The National Greenhouse Accounts (NGA) Factors has been prepared by the Department of the Environment and Energyand is designed for use by companies and individuals to estimate greenhouse gas emissions. The NGA Factors is not published for the purposes of reporting under the National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting Act 2007 (the NGER Act). While drawing on the National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting (Measurement) Determination 2008, the methods described in the NGA Factors have a general application to the estimation of a broader range of greenhouse emissions inventories.

Unless otherwise stated, the methods for calculating emissions listed in this document are “Method 1” from the National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting (Measurement) Determination 2008 incorporating theNational Greenhouse and Energy Reporting (Measurement) Amendment (Energy) Determination 2017.

The default emission factors listed have been estimated by the Department of the Environment and Energyusing the Australian Greenhouse Emissions Information System(AGEIS) and are determined simultaneously with the production of Australia’s National Greenhouse Accounts. This promotes consistency between inventories at company or facility level and the emission estimates presented in the National Greenhouse Accounts. The emission factors are referred to in this document as NGA default emission factors.

More information on the estimation methods employed in the National Greenhouse Accounts is available in the National Inventory Report 2015. The methods used at the national level, and reflected in the factors reported here, are consistent with international guidelines and are subject to international expert review each year.

Revisions to the previous issue

The emission factors reported in this publication replace those listed in the NGA Factors Workbook released inAugust 2016. The NGA Factors Workbook July2017has been updated to include the latest amendments to Method 1 methodologies within the National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting (Measurement) Amendment (Energy) Determination 2017.Updates in this workbook include:

  • Electricity – an explanation of how scope 2 factors are calculated has been added in section 2.3.
  • Electricity – most recentscope 2 and scope 3 emission factors have been included(Tables 5, 6 and 41);
  • Composting factor for biological treatment of solid waste at the landfill has changed (section 5.2).

Further information about revised factors can be found at Appendix 5.

1Key definitions and terms

1.1Direct and indirect emissions

Direct emissions are produced from sources within the boundary of an organisation and as a result of that organisation’s activities. These emissions mainly arise from the following activities:

  • generation of energy, heat, steam and electricity, including carbon dioxide and products of incomplete combustion (methane and nitrous oxide);
  • manufacturing processes which produce emissions (for example, 1cement, aluminium and ammonia production);
  • transportation of materials, products, waste and people; for example, use of vehicles owned and operated by the reporting organisation;
  • fugitive emissions: intentional or unintentional GHG releases (such as methane emissions from coal mines, natural gas leaks from joints and seals); and
  • on-site waste management, such as emissions from landfill sites.

For example, a companywith a car fleet would report greenhouse gas emissions from the combustion of petrol in those motor vehicles as direct emissions. Similarly, a mining company would report methane escaping from a coal seam during mining (fugitive emissions) as direct emissions and a cement manufacturer would report carbon dioxide released during cement clinker production as direct emissions.

Emission factors for calculating direct emissions are generally expressed in the form of a quantity of a given GHG emitted per unit of energy (kg CO2-e /GJ), fuel (t CH4/t coal) or a similar measure. Emission factors are used to calculate GHG emissions by multiplying the factor (e.g. kg CO2/GJ energy in petrol) with activity data (e.g. kilolitres x energy density of petrol used). In this workbook, emission factors are provided as applicable, for each of the following greenhouse gases:

  • carbon dioxide
  • methane
  • nitrous dioxide
  • synthetic gases
  • HFCs, SF6, CF4, C2F6

All factors are standardised by being expressed as a carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2-e). This is achieved by multiplying the individual gas emission factor by the respective gas global warming potential (GWP). The GWPs for each gas are listed in Table 26, Appendix 1.

Indirect emissions are emissions generated in the wider economy as a consequence of an organisation’s activities (particularly from its demand for goods and services), but which are physically produced by the activities of another organisation. The most important category of indirect emissions is from the consumption of electricity. Other examples of indirect emissions from an organisation’s activities include upstream emissions generated in the extraction and production of fossil fuels, downstream emissions from transport of an organisation’s product to customers, and emissions from contracted/outsourced activities. The appropriate emission factor for these activities depends on the parts of upstream production and downstream use considered in calculating emissions associated with the activity.

1.2Types of emission factors

The world of emission factors can become confusing—the following is provided to clarify the purpose of the types of emissions factors in this workbook.

Firstly, it is important to note that an emission factor is activity-specific. The activity determines the emission factor used. The scope that emissions are reported under is determined by whether the activity is within the organisation’s boundary (direct—scope 1) or outside it (indirect—scope 2 and scope 3).

  • Direct (or point-source) emission factors give the kilograms of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2-e) emitted per unit of activity at the point of emission release (i.e. fuel use, energy use, manufacturing process activity, mining activity, on-site waste disposal, etc.). These factors are used to calculate scope1 emissions.
  • Indirect emission factors are used to calculate scope2emissions from the generation of the electricity purchased and consumed by an organisation as kilograms of CO2e per unit of electricity consumed. Scope2 emissions are physically produced by the burning of fuels (coal, natural gas, etc.) at the power station.
  • Various emission factors can be used to calculate scope3emissions. For ease of use, this workbook reports specific ‘scope3’ emission factors for organisations that:

(a)burn fossil fuels: to estimate their indirect emissions attributable to the extraction, production and transport of those fuels; or

(b)consume purchased electricity: to estimate their indirect emissions from the extraction, production and transport of fuel burned at generation and the indirect emissions attributable to the electricity lost in delivery in the transmission and distribution network.

The definition, methodologies and application of scope 3 factors are currently subject to international discussions.Available scope 3 emission factors are listed in Appendix 4. Scope3 factors and methods are also provided for companies wishing to estimate their scope3 emissions from disposal of waste generated (e.g. if the waste is transported outside the organisation and disposed of).

1.3Information sources

The principle sources of information used in developing this workbook include:

American Petroleum Institute (2009) Compendium of Greenhouse Gas Emissions Estimation Methodologies for the Oil and Gas Industry 2009.

Australian Greenhouse Office (2006), AGO Generator Efficiency Standards - Technical Guidelines, December 2006, Commonwealth of Australia, Canberra.

Energy Supply Association of Australia (2015),Electricity, Gas Australia 2015.

Department of the Environmentand Energy (2017), National Inventory Report2015, Commonwealth of Australia, Canberra.

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (2006), 2006 IPCC Guidelines for National Greenhouse Gas Inventories; Japan.

International Aluminium Institute (2006), The Aluminium Sector Greenhouse Gas Protocol, Addendum to the WRI/WBCSD GHG Protocol.

International Energy Agency (2005), Energy Statistics Manual, 2005, Paris.

National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting (Measurement) Determination 2008. (Cwlth),ComLaw,

US EPA, International Aluminium Institute (2003), Protocol for Measurement of Tetrafluoromethane (CF4) and Hexafluoroethane (C2F6) Emissions from Primary Aluminium Production.

World Business Council for Sustainable Development / World Resources Institute, The Greenhouse Gas Protocol, A Corporate Accounting and Reporting Standard, Revised edition.

World Business Council for Sustainable Development, (2005), CO2 Accounting and Reporting Standard for the Cement Industry- The Cement CO2 Protocol, June 2005.

Wilkenfeld, George, and Associates Pty Ltd (2007), Australia’s National Greenhouse Gas Inventory,1990, 1995, 2000 and 2005 End Use Allocation of Energy Emissions, report to the Department of Climate Change, Commonwealth of Australia, Canberra.

Wilkenfeld, George and Associates (2012), Updated Scope 3 Emission Factors for Natural Gas and Ethane Consumed in Australia., report to the Department of Climate Change and Energy Efficiency.

1.4Additional information and web sites

Australian National Greenhouse Gas Accounts and related topics

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) National Greenhouse Gas Inventories Program

National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting

The Emissions and Energy Reporting System (EERS)

United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and related topics including the Kyoto Protocol and Paris Agreement

The Greenhouse Gas Protocol Initiative (convened by the World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD) and the World Resources Institute (WRI))

1.5Contacts

For enquiries relating to this Workbook

Email:

For enquiries relating to National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting

Email:

Clean Energy Regulator general enquiries line1300 553 542

National Greenhouse Accounts (NGA) Factors

2Energy

This section addresses the estimation of emissions in the energy sector and includes emission factors for:

  • the stationary combustion of solid, gaseous and liquid fuels (section 2.1);
  • the combustion of liquid and gaseous fuels for transport (section 2.2);
  • the consumption of purchased electricity (section 2.3); and
  • the extraction of fossil fuels (section 2.4).

The principal greenhouse gas generated by the combustion of fossil fuels for energy is carbon dioxide. The quantity of gas produced depends on the carbon content of the fuel and the degree to which the fuel is fully combusted (i.e. the oxidation factor, which usually ranges between 98% and 99.5%). Small quantities of methane and nitrous oxide are also produced, depending on the actual combustion conditions. Methane may be generated when fuel is heated, but only partially burnt, and depends on combustion temperatures and the level of oxygen present. Nitrous oxide results from the reaction between nitrogen and oxygen in the combustion air.

2.1Stationary energy emissions (non-transport)

Estimates of emissions from the combustion of individual fuel types are made by multiplying a (physical) quantity of fuel combusted by a fuel-specific energy content factor and a fuelspecific emission factor. This is performed for each relevant greenhouse gas (in this case, carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide). Separate calculations should be carried out for each fuel type.

Total greenhouse emissions are calculated by summing the emissions of each fuel type and each greenhouse gas.

2.1.1Fuel combustion emissions – solid fuels

The following formula can be used to estimate greenhouse gas emissions from the combustion of each type of fuel listed in Table 1.

where:

Eij is the emissions of gas type (j), (carbon dioxide, methane or nitrous oxide), from fuel type (i) (CO2e tonnes).

Qiis the quantity of fuel type (i) (tonnes).

ECiis the energy content factor of the fuel (gigajoules per tonne) according to each fuel in Table 1.

IfQi is measured in gigajoules, then ECi is 1.

EFijoxecis the emission factor for each gas type (j) (which includes the effect of an oxidation factor) for fuel type (i) (kilograms of CO2e per gigajoule) according to each fuel in Table 1.

Table 1: Fuel combustion emission factors - solid fuels and certain coal based products

Fuel combusted / Energy content factor
GJ/t / Emission factor
kg CO2e/GJ
(relevant oxidation factors incorporated)
CO2 / CH4 / N2O
Bituminous coal / 27.0 / 90 / 0.03 / 0.2
Sub-bituminous coal / 21.0 / 90 / 0.03 / 0.2
Anthracite / 29.0 / 90 / 0.03 / 0.2
Brown coal / 10.2 / 93.5 / 0.02 / 0.4
Coking coal / 30.0 / 91.8 / 0.02 / 0.2
Coal briquettes / 22.1 / 95 / 0.07 / 0.3
Coal coke / 27.0 / 107 / 0.04 / 0.2
Coal tar / 37.5 / 81.8 / 0.03 / 0.2
Solid fossil fuels other than those mentioned in the items above / 22.1 / 95 / 0.07 / 0.3
Industrial materials and tyres that are derived from fossil fuels, if recycled and combusted to produce heat or electricity / 26.3 / 81.6 / 0.02 / 0.2
Nonbiomass municipal materials, if recycled and combusted to produce heat or electricity / 10.5 / 87.1 / 0.7 / 1.1
Dry wood / 16.2 / 0 / 0.1 / 1.2
Green and air dried wood / 10.4 / 0 / 0.1 / 1.2
Sulphite lyes / 12.4 / 0 / 0.07 / 0.6
Bagasse / 9.6 / 0 / 0.2 / 1.2
Biomass municipal and industrial materials, if recycled and combusted to produce heat or electricity / 12.2 / 0 / 0.7 / 1.1
Charcoal / 31.1 / 0 / 4.8 / 1.1
Primary solid biomass fuels other than those mentioned in the items above / 12.2 / 0 / 0.7 / 1.1

Source: National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting (Measurement) Determination 2008 (Schedule 1)

Notes: All emission factors incorporate relevant oxidation factors (sourced from the Department of the Environment and Energy National Inventory Report).

NoteEnergy content and emission factors for coal products are measured on an as combusted basis. The energy content for black coal types and coking coal (metallurgical coal) is on a washed basis.

Example: calculation of emissions from black coal consumption

A facility consumes 20,000 tonnes of bituminous coal for a purpose other than for the production of electricity or to produce coke.

Emissions of greenhouse gases (carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide) in tonnes of CO2e are estimated as follows:

Emissions of carbon dioxide:

= (20,000 x 27.0 x 90)/1,000

= 48,600 t CO2-e

Emissions of methane:

= (20,000 x 27.0 x 0.03)/1,000

= 16 t CO2-e

Emissions of nitrous oxide:

= (20,000 x 27.0 x 0.2)/1,000

= 108 t CO2-e

Total scope 1 GHG emissions = 48,600 + 16 + 108

= 48,724 t CO2-e

2.1.2Fuel combustion emissions – gaseous fuels

The following formula can be used to estimate greenhouse gas emissions from the combustion of each type of fuel listed in Table 2.